The life of a modern day man who makes knives by hand is fascinating [VIDEO]

In an extremely interesting set of documentaris called Made by Hand, Knife maker Joel Bukiwicz was featured this week in what can only be described as more documentarily inspirational than anything you'd see on the Discovery Channel.

Granted to say, the video's gone massively viral. Joel created his own store called Cut Brooklyn, selling amazing handcrafted knives, and the featurette illustrates the painstakingly immense detail he puts into every piece created.

He was originally a writer; but despised the creative response and self gratification. It's one hell of a story; but it's the humble, somewhat overtly understated passion he has for his craft that's truly inspiring. Take a look at the featurette below to connect with every meticulous move he makes, while being bashful about his skill in craftsmanship. It's exactly what it's called: hand made.

The Instagram Camera Is The Modern-Day Polaroid Camera, With Added Social Features

Having already been behind some of the most gorgeous iPhone 5 concept designs currently filtering through the many layers of the net, artist Antonia De Rosa of ADR Studio is now turning his sights on a Polaroid-like camera inspired by social photo-sharing app Instagram.

Amnesty International has launched a Facebook application called Trial By Timeline, which illustrates to users of the social network how their public postings and interactions could see them imprisoned, tortured, killed by extremists or even beheaded in other countries with oppressive regimes.

“Last week I accidentally posted an internal rant about service platforms to my public Google+ account (i.e. this one),” Google engineer Steve Yegge writes in his apologetic blog post. “Bagging on the company, even in an internal memo, was uncharacteristically unprofessional of me. So I’ve been feeling pretty guilty for the past week.”

So what was this muck up of sorts? Not too long ago, he posted a 5000 word update on his G+ account (intended for internal employees which ended up going public) which really slams Amazon on it's flaws and Google's inability to understand platforms.

Life in a Day movie available on Youtube

Remember a while ago when Google put out the request for people to record moments in their life? Well, neither could we; but the results are available on Youtube for free.

To somewhat diverge from the image of Youtube being merely a place for video game griefing videos and a general cute animal storage system, Google has taken it's quest a step forward by cutting through the over 4,500 hours of video uploaded for the documentary and created a 95 minute feature piece, that made the transition from cinematic spectacle to a free piece of consumer content in a scarily short amount of time. Watch it below with 25 languages worth of subtitles (if you're reading from overseas). That's just how nice we are!

Chatroulette is now 'safe for work,' makes money off 50,000 naked men

It goes without saying that Chatroulette was definitely a hit in 2010. That was before one in every two random people you connected to had some form of genitalia out on display. However, founder Andrey Ternovskiy has a rather ingenious way of both controlling the pornographic content, and making money off it at the same time.